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Jul 12, 2024

How long will Earth exist?

Posted by in category: futurism

The earth will be habitable for 1.4 billion years but by then we could control the earth to make last forever same with the sun with high levels of technologies.


Humans will likely die long before our planet does.

Jul 12, 2024

Real-life ‘stillsuit’: Dune-inspired upgrade for spacesuits allow astronauts to recycle urine into water

Posted by in category: space

Astronauts on spacewalks famously have to relieve themselves inside their spacesuits. Not only is this uncomfortable for the wearer and unhygienic, it is also wasteful, as—unlike wastewater on board the International Space Station (ISS)—the water in urine from spacewalks is not recycled.

Jul 11, 2024

Coherent nanophotonic electron accelerator

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, nanotechnology

face_with_colon_three year 2023.


A scalable nanophotonic electron accelerator with a high particle acceleration gradient and good beam confinement achieves an energy gain of 43%.

Jul 11, 2024

Scientists use cosmic rays to study twisters and other severe storms

Posted by in category: climatology

Cosmic rays could offer scientists another way to track and study violent tornadoes and other severe weather phenomena, a new study suggests.

Jul 11, 2024

Mammal Aging as a Programmed Life Cycle Function — Resolving the Cause and Effect Conundrum

Posted by in categories: biological, life extension

Advanced Biology is a peer-reviewed, interdisciplinary biology journal publishing innovative research at the intersection of the life sciences.

Jul 11, 2024

Physicists suggest tachyons can be reconciled with the special theory of relativity

Posted by in categories: particle physics, quantum physics

However, a paper just published in Physical Review D by physicists from the University of Warsaw and the University of Oxford has shown that many of these prejudices were unfounded. Tachyons are not only not ruled out by the theory, but allow us to understand its causal structure better.

Motion at speeds beyond the of light is one of the most controversial issues in physics. Hypothetical particles that could move at superluminal speeds, called tachyons (from the Greek tachýs—fast, quick), are the “enfant terrible” of modern physics. Until recently, they were widely regarded as creations that do not fit into the .

At least three reasons for the non-existence of tachyons within were known so far. The first: the ground state of the tachyon field was supposed to be unstable, which would mean that such superluminal particles would form “avalanches.” The second: a change in the inertial observer was supposed to lead to a change in the number of particles observed in his reference system, yet the existence of, say, seven particles cannot depend on who is looking at them. The third reason: the energy of the superluminal particles could take on negative values.

Jul 11, 2024

With spin centers, quantum computing takes a step forward

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, quantum physics, robotics/AI

Quantum computing, which uses the laws of quantum mechanics, can solve pressing problems in a broad range of fields, from medicine to machine learning, that are too complex for classical computers.

Jul 11, 2024

Observation of 3D acoustic quantum Hall states

Posted by in category: quantum physics

The quantum Hall effect (QHE) is one of the most notable discoveries in condensed matter physics, opening the door to topological physics. Extending QHE into three dimensions is an inspiring but challenging endeavor. This difficulty arises because the Landau levels in three dimensions extend into bands along the direction of the magnetic field, preventing the opening of bulk gaps.

Jul 11, 2024

Physicists discover a way to imprint a previously unseen geometrical form of chirality onto electrons

Posted by in category: physics

Have you ever placed the palm of your left hand on the back of your right hand in such a way that all fingers point in the same direction? If you have, then you probably know that your left thumb will not touch its right counterpart. Neither rotations nor translations nor their combinations can turn a left hand into a right hand and vice versa. This feature is called chirality.

Jul 11, 2024

Physicists demonstrate quantum scale inverse Mpemba effect with single trapped ions

Posted by in category: quantum physics

A team of physicists at the Weizmann Institute of Science in Israel has successfully demonstrated the inverse Mpemba effect at the quantum level using single trapped ions. In their study, published in the journal Physical Review Letters, the group demonstrated the effect by trapping a strontium-88 ion coupled to an external thermal bath.

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